TAKING A STAND AGAINST PORK BARREL AND CORRUPTION: OUR SPIRITUAL AND MORAL OBLIGATION AS STEWARDS...

download TAKING A STAND AGAINST PORK BARREL AND CORRUPTION:  OUR SPIRITUAL AND MORAL OBLIGATION AS STEWARDS OF THE LORD

of 2

Transcript of TAKING A STAND AGAINST PORK BARREL AND CORRUPTION: OUR SPIRITUAL AND MORAL OBLIGATION AS STEWARDS...

  • 7/29/2019 TAKING A STAND AGAINST PORK BARREL AND CORRUPTION: OUR SPIRITUAL AND MORAL OBLIGATION AS STEWARD

    1/2

    TAKING A STAND AGAINST PORK BARREL AND CORRUPTION:

    OUR SPIRITUAL AND MORAL OBLIGATION AS STEWARDS OF THE LORD

    The steward who defrauds his master in an attempt to receive future favor from the people who benefited

    from his dishonest acts sees his masters resources as a means for his own personal enjoyment and

    advancement. Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest

    with very little will also be dishonest with much. For no one can serve two masters. Either you will hate the

    one and love the other, or you will be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve both God and

    money.The Parable of the Dishonest Manager (Luke 16:1-13)

    Public Office is a Public Trust. The fundamental task and obligation of individuals in the government is to

    serve the best interest of the people and should not discharge his position out of self-interest. This principle

    is particularly important to elected officials, who from the moment of their election have to perform many

    obligations with potential conflict of interest.

    The unfolding story of the P10 Billion Pork Barrel Scam and the P600 Million Malampaya Fund Misuse in the

    national scene; and the false promises of tobacco farmers welfare and development from the RA 7171 (An

    Act to Promote the Development of the Farmer in the Virginia Tobacco Producing Provinces), and the

    perennial unliquidated cash advances from the provincial coffers are illustration that our elected officials

    have lost sight of this primary principle of honest and truthful public service.

    They have defrauded and robbed Gods people of their taxes; taxes that came from hard-earned incomes of

    workingmen and farmers. These officials are dishonest managers who used public funds entrusted to them

    for their own personal enjoyment and advancement.

    The Meaty Pork and Leafy Tobacco Funds. Under the pork barrel scheme, legislators and members of the

    executive branch receive lump-sum allotments from the National Budget. Congressmen and senators

    received P70 Million and P200 Million respectively which we call PDAF. The executive department on the

    other hand calls it with many names. The President in particular has three significant sources for lump-sum

    funds the Special Purpose Fund, Presidential Social Fund and the Malampaya Gas Funds. The Presidentspork barrel for 2014 is P1.3 trillion, more than half of the proposed National Budget which is P2.24 trillion.

    On the other hand, RA 7171, a law intended to improve the lives of our tobacco farmers states that 15% of

    the taxes collected from manufactured Virginia-based cigarettes will be given to Virginia tobacco producing

    provinces. The Province of Ilocos Sur produces almost 60% of Virginia tobacco in the country. Its

    accumulated RA 7171 share from 1996-2012 is P9.147 Billion. Its Implementing Rules & Regulation (IRR)

    appropriates the provincial share into the following: 30% each for the provincial government and

    congressional districts, and 40% for the municipalities and cities, said 40% is further divided into 50% to be

    shared equally and 50% to be distributed according to the volume of Virginia Tobacco Produce.

    The Lords commandmentThou shall not steal!Janet Napoles, the woman in the center of the

    controversy was able to skim from the P10 Billion PDAF allocations channelled to her fake NGOs from

    taxpayers money. Funnelling of funds to fictitious NGOs associated with Janet Napoles persisted under

    Aquino. Based on the Commission on Audit report released in August 16, 192 lawmakers misused their

    funds. Some of which are now members of the Aquino cabinet and the ruling party Liberal Party. According

    to an Inquirer report published in August 26, around P500 million were again awarded to fake NGOs during

    Aquinos administration.

    Similarly, government auditors were able to discern P1.3 Billion worth of misused, misappropriated and/or

    remained unliquidated by the provincial government from 1999-2005 (Newsbreak May 5, 2009). Despite

    this huge share, the province has an accumulated debt interest of P333.74 Million from 1997-2011 to the

    Philippine Deposit Insurance Corporation (PDIC). The Commission on Audit (COA) have also noted in their

    2012 Audit Report the inefficient management of public funds such as the P20.023 Million worth of funds for

    infrastructure projects transferred to LGUs that has no liquidations reports and the P25.30 Million possible

    savings from the bloated number of contractual workers.

    What is to be Done? Bishop Oscar Cruz was able to sum it up perfectly from his closing message during the

    Forward March -- Prayers are good but prayers alone are not enough. We, too, must act.

    But our actions must not be limited on the call to abolish the pork barrel. We must look and go beyond the

    P10 Billion stolen by Napoles and her cohorts; and also study, expose, and condemn the massive thievery of

    public funds in the local level. To be able to do this, we must arm ourselves with both the wisdom from the

    scriptures and analysis of contemporary socio-political issues to be able to examine the entirety of the issue.

  • 7/29/2019 TAKING A STAND AGAINST PORK BARREL AND CORRUPTION: OUR SPIRITUAL AND MORAL OBLIGATION AS STEWARD

    2/2

    It is for these reasons that we, members of the different faith and churches joined together, discussed the

    issues among ourselves and shared our God-given wisdom with each other to better comprehend and

    articulate the issue on corruption, patronage politics and the pork barrel system. After we have bowed our

    heads for the guidance and wisdom of the Almighty and thorough exchanges of views, we have come to the

    following conclusions and recommendations:

    1. The pork barrel is inherently vulnerable to corruption and the ultimate tool to promote patronagepolitics. The effort of Malacaang to sanitize the issue by providing the pork barrel with another

    name and seeming new mechanism is not a just and honest response to the strong clamor but rather

    a plain grand deceit of the people. To truly abolish the pork barrel system, we endorse the following

    recommendations of the Peoples Movement for Change:

    a. Remove the congressional and presidential lump sum appropriations from the GAA.b. Rechannel the funds directly to agencies and list projects and programs to be funded by said

    appropriations as line budget items.

    c. Reiterate in the GAA that line item budgets sourced from the abolished pork barrelappropriations are too be fully implemented and not subject to the discretion of the President

    or any member of Congress.

    d. Introduce stronger freedom of information provisions in the GAA to ensure transparency andaccountability in the use of public funds.

    2. The RA 7171 has served as the milking cow of politicians. It has failed to uplift the lives of tobaccofarmers and has enriched a handful of politicians, reinforced political dynasty, and sustained

    patronage politics in the province. We hereby call for the following:

    a. Use the funds for programs and projects that would directly benefit the farmers and supportgenuine agrarian reform.

    b. Review and amendments of the provisions of the law and its IRR to ensure that the funds willbe utilized only for projects that will directly benefit the farmers.

    c. Allow greater public participation and access to information regarding the utilization of thefund and to monitor program/project implementation.

    d. Conduct a special audit of the RA 7171 provincial share from 1993 up to present; and makethe involved individuals accountable if any misused, misappropriated and/or unliquidated

    funds are discovered during the special audit.

    Singed during the Ilocos Sur Ecumenical Movement Discussion-Workshop on Pork Barrel & Corruption held

    at the City Church of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines, Candon City, Ilocos Sur.

    September 23, 2013.

    REV. MARCELINO B. MARIANO MSGR. COSMENIO M. ROSIMO, Jr.Co-Convenor, ISEM Co-Convenor, ISEM

    United Church of Christ in the Philippines President, Clergy Assembly

    Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia

    In the presence of: RT. REV. VERMILLON TAGALOG

    Bishop, Diocese of La Union, Ilocos Sur & Abra

    Iglesia Filipina Independiente

    United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP): Revs. June Paplonot, Jerry Arzadon, Lyndon Ubuan, Roel

    Balabag, Maricar Duminsil, Ofelia Segundo

    United Methodist Church of the Philippines (UMCP): Revs. Joel Bengbeng, Augusto Dosdosen, Ernesto Gonzalo,

    Jose Balocanag, Benson Nang

    Iglesia Filipina Independiente (IFI): Frs. Ferdinand Lacanaria, Jed Manzano, Danilo Habon